Oxford
Brookes v. St. Peter’s , Oxford
Oxford Brookes, in the shape of Simon Joyce, Paula Ayres, Stephen Mayes, and skipper
David Ballard have already
done some damage in this competition. They knocked out Jesus, Oxford in their
first round match, and UCL in their second. Their opposition, John Armitage, Ed Roberts, Spike Smith and their
skipper, Gabriel Trueblood, of St. Peter’s, Oxford, had defeated Sussex in
their first round, and Selwyn, Cambridge in the second. Now, you probably shouldn’t
single out individuals for their performances, but a number of commentators
were particularly intrigued to see how well the St. Peter’s skipper would do
this week, after a couple of stellar buzzer performances thus far.
The first starter was very long and involved,
as first starters often are, and you hadn’t to lose sight of the fact that
eventually the key to the question would appear. In this case it was ‘1793’ and
‘famous Historical Work’. Stephen Mayes won the buzzer race to give the correct
answer of Edward Gibbon. Areas which feature in BBC coastal weather forecasts provided
them with one bonus. Gabriel Trueblood opened his account, recognising a potted
history of the city of Strasbourg. This earned a set on large numbers on which
we both scored a full house. A rare incorrect early buzz from the St. Peter’s
skipper gave Oxford Brookes the chance to answer on the baobab tree, but they
couldn’t. I was a bit surprised neither team knew the term ‘romanesque’, but
not as much as JP. Both teams are experienced enough at this game that they
knew enough to wait for the clinching clue in the next question, before going
for the buzzer. Asked for a specific method of transport rendered obsolete by
Dunlop’s pneumatic tyre it was Simon Joyce who won the buzzer race to answer
penny farthing. A set of bonuses on the island of Java proved unforgiving. This
took us to the first picture starter, and it was Simon Joyce who recognised the
logo of Plaid Cymru with any helpful lettering removed. So far the team hadn’t
exactly been lucky in the bonuses that had fallen to them, and they weren’t
exactly lucky with the picture set. This featured logos of other European
political parties which, like Plaid, operate under the European Free Alliance
umbrella. They managed 1 with the Viking Party. Do they send out a lot of spam,
I wonder? JP offered us a quotation about a composer. It sounded like Beethoven
– Gabriel Trueblood offered Beethoven, and it was Beethoven. A UC special set
of bonuses followed. The team had to identify capital cities of Asian countries
from the chemical symbols from which they can be spelled. Phew. Not quite as
difficult as it sounds, but getting on that way. They took a full house. Which
meant that despite trailing in terms of starters answered, St. Peter’s actually
led at the ten minute mark – 45 – 40.
Gabriel Trueblood took starter number 3,
knowing the term stent. Authors with the surname James only provided another 5
points. Spike Smith took the next starter, knowing a number of clues that all
added up to Nickel. Protozoal diseases of humans didn’t promise a great deal,
if truth be said, but the skipper is a medical student, and he made short work
of these. He also knows classical music too, since he very quickly recognised
Albinoni’s Adagio for his 4th starter. 3 more blockbusters from the
Co-op’s list of most requested musical pieces for funeral services provided
just the one correct answer on Elgar’s Nimrod. Never mind, it still brought up
triple figures. Starter number 6 for the St. Peter’s captain was provided when
he knew that Zhang Zhou is associated with Taoism. Observational astronomy
provided another 5 points for the total. Spike Smith took his second starter by
recognising a definition of irony – well, it’s like goldy and bronzy, but it’s
made of iron (Blackadder the Third? One of the Blackadder series anyway). There
was some laughter when JP announced that their bonuses were on potatoes. Having
said that, though, they still took two bonuses. A relatively simple mental
arithmetic question – add the number of pawns on a chessboard etc. – which just
required you to keep up with the different elements of it, saw Gabriel
Trueblood take starter number 7. The team only took one bonus on palaces, but
it really didn’t matter. They had completely shut out OB for this middle
section of the contest, and had a lead of 110 points.
Spike Smith, the able lieutenant of the St.
Peter’s team took his third starter by identifying a portrait by Cezanne. 3
more portraits of the art dealer Ambroise Vollard followed, and they identified
the artists of 1 more portrait of the same. Now, whenever you hear the words ‘district
of Seoul’ in a question, you press your buzzer and say ‘Gangnam’. That’s what
Gabriel Trueblood did to take his 8th starter. Physics starters did
little for either of us, although the team managed one more than I did – namely
1. Finally Simon Joyce managed to claw back another starter for OB, knowing
that Tom Bradlye had been a mayor of Los Angeles. They went on to take two
bonuses on the historical term – the Pale-. Gabriel Trueblood took starter
number 9, knowing that the acronym SALIGIA is taken from latin words for the 7
Deadly Sins. Good shout. Bonuses on fictional books asked for the author and
the real books in which specific fictional books appeared. 2 more correct
answers added 10 points to the score, but the contest was already over. It was
just a matter of what the final score would be. Neither team knew the Prague
school for the next starter. It was Simon Joyce who won the buzzer race to
correctly answer that Napoleon Bonaparte created the Legion D’Honneur. A bonus
on Botany pushed OB within one set of a triple figure score – but was there
time to get it? Gabriel Trueblood took his tenth starter knowing that the word
comet is derived from the Greek for long hair. Eritrea provided a full set of
bonuses. Starter 11 for Mr. Trueblood followed immediately afterwards, since he
knew that Angola shares the same three flag colours as Belgium and Germany. A
UC special set on years that only contain two different digits only gave time
for one correct answer before the gong.
The final score was 240-80. We all know that
you win as a team, or you lose as a team, but even so this was another highly
impressive performance by Gabriel Trueblood. There’s a long way to go in this
series yet, and anything can happen, but no team will fancy playing against St.
Peter’s now.
Jeremy Paxman Watch
Just when you thought that giving up Newsnight
had mellowed JP for good . . . When asked for the architectural term
Romanesque, neither team managed to get the correct answer. This earned this
withering blast,
“No. Don’t know much about architecture either
of you.”
He was back to rubbing salt into wounds at the
end of the show as well, saying to OB, “I’m afraid you got a bit whipped there,
Oxford Brookes, didn’t you?”
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of The Week
There is a variety of potato called a Vivaldi
5 comments:
A result that most of us probably expected, and I would have to say St Peter's will be considered lukewarm favourites to win the whole series now.
Of course, there is still the issue of whether Mr Trueblood's colleagues can pick up the slack if he has an off-day; given this was probably the final show before a recording break, we shall have to wait and see if he maintains his ability into the next match.
I think you may have slightly miscalculated Mr Trueblood's starter tally there Dave; I make it ten myself. His side managed 23/38 bonuses and Oxford Brookes 6/15, where our man Simon Joyce (asphinctersays) was best with four starters.
On Monday, I am informed it is Durham vs Caius, which means it must be Trinity vs Magdalen the week after.
Selwyn, Oxford?!?!
Hi Stephen
Oxford, Cambridge, same diff (joke!)
Oops.
Hi Jack Sorry if I miscounted on the starters - I was away the day we did Maths at school.
Simon Joyce did well not to get disheartened by the way that St. Peter's shut them out during the middle of the contest, and to come back and still take some more starters. OB are not out of the contest yet.
Slight correct/random trivia, if I may!
The Viking Party was actually the Pirate Party. The logo may or may not look familiar - it's essentially the official political party wing of the Pirate Bay filesharing service. Yes, the same one the Swedish and other governments have been repeatedly trying to shut down and that is now inaccessible (legally) in the UK. They've actually got some representation, having clearly appealed sufficiently as a protest vote to a big enough demographic.
Entertaining contest again, though it does seem that Trueblood again largely - though not entirely - carried his team. Against a team who lacks such a player, OB will fancy their chances. I hope the scoreline doesn't bother them as much as Paxo seemed to imply it might, because they're a better team than that.
Thanks for the kind words, Londinius. I was just getting beaten to the buzzer by Mr Trueblood throughout, fair play to him, he was just a bit too quick for me. I was pleased with my performance on balance, just a shame the other guys couldn't get into the game more.
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